Zelensky’s ex-FM gets plum job at Harvard
Ukraine’s Dmitry Kuleba has been appointed a senior fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government Read Full Article at RT.com
Dmitry Kuleba has been appointed a senior fellow at the Kennedy School of Government
Former Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba has been awarded a senior fellowship at Harvard, one of the top universities in the US.
The role at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School will focus on “diplomacy, security, and resilience.”
The center announced his appointment earlier this week, describing Kuleba as “one of the most influential diplomats of his generation” and a “global champion” of democracy and freedom.
Founded in 1636 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard is the oldest university in the US and one of the most selective among the elite Ivy League colleges. Average tuition fees are more than $57,000 per year.
Kuleba’s appointment underscores the institution’s “commitment to addressing the world’s most pressing challenges in an era of deep geopolitical uncertainty” as well as its mission to prepare the next generation of leaders, the statement claimed.
According to the center, Kuleba is “a leading architect of Ukraine’s foreign and security policy,” and played a “pivotal role” in shaping Kiev’s wartime diplomacy and strengthening its relationships with the US and the EU.
Read more
Kuleba stepped down as Kiev’s chief diplomat in September, amid a large-scale purge of senior officials by Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky. Before his resignation, he had repeatedly insisted that a battlefield victory was possible for Ukraine, as long as Western backers provide sufficient quantities of heavy weaponry.
His demands for weapons and money were often abrasive, notably when he told German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock to hand over long-range cruise missiles, as it was “just a matter of time” before she would “do it anyway.”
“His presence will be an inspiration to our students and an invaluable resource to our academic community,” said Meghan L. O’Sullivan, director of the Belfer Center.
At the Kennedy School, Kuleba will focus on issues “at the intersection of diplomacy, security, and resilience,” exploring strategies to “counter autocracies, strengthen democratic institutions, and build resilient international coalitions,” O’Sullivan said. He will conduct seminars and lectures for students, and also plans to write a book.
Last month Kuleba admitted in an interview with the Financial Times that Ukraine will “lose the war” with Russia if the situation continues as it is, and that Kiev was “lucky” to get the support it did under the current US President Joe Biden administration.